Whether discussing heatwaves, floods, or droughts, climate change has likely become a regular topic in your daily conversations as it has for me.
As a journalist, I hear stories about the devastation individuals experience after a disaster has hit their city or village. A farmer tells you his sheep have died of thirst because of a drought, or an elderly woman might describe how wildfires have burned her house and destroyed everything inside, including her memories.
Illustrations like melting ice caps, sea level rises, plastic pollution and loss of biodiversity are some of the images that Climoji has, and UTC doesn’t. I believe “they have had a lasting impact because they are simple like the standard emoji, and the most successful Climoji explicitly rides the line between tragedy and comedy,” she adds.issued by the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, the world has baked every month for a year above 1.5 degrees Celsius , a critical warming benchmark set by scientists.